| Literature DB >> 22235182 |
Haim Shapiro1, Aviv Lutaty, Amiram Ariel.
Abstract
Current research depicts specific modes of immunity and energy metabolism as being interrelated at the molecular, cellular, organ and organism level. Hence, whereas M2 (alternatively-activated) macrophages dominate insulin-sensitive adipose tissue in the lean, M1-skewed (classically-activated) macrophages accumulate in parallel to adiposity in the obese, and promote inflammation and insulin resistance, that is, meta-inflammation. The latest frontier of immuno-metabolism explores the coregulation of energy metabolism and immune function within hematopoietic cells. M1-skewed macrophages are sustained in edematous, hypoxic tissues by anaerobic glycolysis, whereas mitochondrial biogenesis and respiration dominates in M2 cells. We review the underlying mechanisms and the consequences of the transition from M2 to M1 predominance in adipose tissue, as well as the extracellular signals and transcription factors that control macrophage phenotypes and impose distinct metabolic modes.Entities:
Keywords: inflamation; insulin resistance; macrophages; metabolism
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22235182 PMCID: PMC3253544 DOI: 10.1100/2011/397971
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ScientificWorldJournal ISSN: 1537-744X
Figure 1Interdependence of adipocyte and macrophage functional modes in the lean and obese states. The left side of the diagram depicts the insulin-sensitive adipocyte and M2-type adipose tissue macrophage characteristic of adipose tissue in the lean state. Adipocytes are of a normal size and are sensitive to insulin's signal to minimize the cleavage of fatty acids from triglyceride stores (lipolysis). Consequently, local and circulating concentrations of FFA are maintained below harmful levels. Healthy adipocytes (as well as other cell types not shown here) are a source of M2-inducing cytokines—IL-4 and IL-13, which signal through STAT6 phosphorylation to induce transcription of PPARs, their coactivator, PGC-1β, and 12/15-LO. PGC-1β promotes the assembly of the STAT6 transcription complex, thereby amplifying the expression of signature M2 proteins, such as arginase-1 and the pattern recognition/endocytic receptor CD206. Induction of 12/15-LO further enhances the M2 phenotype and insulin sensitivity by synthesizing 15-HETE (from arachidonic acid), 17S-HDHA, and RvD1 (the latter two from DHA). RvD1 is a specialized proresolution mediator and appears to act on its cognate receptor (not shown) expressed on macrophages and adipocytes to promote the M2 phenotype and to induce adiponectin secretion, respectively. Indeed, healthy adipocytes produce and secrete greater amounts of adiponectin than in the obese, and this adipokine exerts insulin sensitizing and anti-inflammatory effects, locally and systemically. Adiponectin signaling inhibits M1-skewing, enhances PPAR-γ activity, and increases oxidative metabolism in adipose tissue macrophages. The ligand binding domain of PPAR-γ recognizes oxygenated metabolites of polyunsaturated fatty acids which are consumed in the context of a healthful diet, including 15-HETE and 17S-HDHA. Activated PPAR-γ inhibits NF-κB-dependent gene expression. It also forms a heterodimer with RXR to induce proteins involved in the uptake (e.g., CD36), esterification (e.g., DGAT), and oxidation (e.g., LCAD) of FFAs released from adjacent adipocytes. Consequently, the concentration of FFAs does not reach toxic levels. Free, extracellular DHA contributes to M2-skewing by activating a novel surface receptor (GRP120). During weight gain, adipocytes undergo hypertrophy in an attempt to store excess FAs as neutral lipids, that is, triglyceride. Unfortunately, the excess supply of FAs eventually surpasses the capacity of adipocytes and adipose tissue to store lipids, leading to an increase in FFA concentrations. The reduced sensitivity to insulin that accompanies obesity also increases FA release by allowing lipolysis of triglycerides. In conjunction with LPS derived from the abnormal intestinal flora that populates the obese, and with M1/Th1-type cytokines, free saturated FAs activate macrophage IKK and JNK1, thereby inducing the M1 immune program. M1 macrophages produce IL-1β and TNFα, which increase and activate adipocyte IKK and JNK to block insulin signaling. As a result, the number of M1 macrophages parallels the expansion of adipose tissue, exacerbating inflammation and insulin resistance.
Figure 2Coregulation of immune phenotype and metabolic mode in macrophages. Recruited macrophages display striking phenotype plasticity in the course of acute, spontaneously resolving inflammation. Upon exudation into edematous, hypoxic tissue, macrophages initially acquire the proinflammatory and microbicidal M1 phenotype and depend on anaerobic glycolysis for ATP. Pathogen-associated molecular patterns, Th1-type cytokines (not shown), and hypoxia-sensitive transcription factors (HIF-1 and Pur, see text for details) cooperate to induce the expression both of M1 mediators (e.g., cytokines, iNOS, CD11b/CD18) and of the proteins/enzymes that perform anaerobic glycolysis. The insulin-independent glucose transporter (GLUT 1) facilitates glucose uptake; pyruvate kinase catalyzes pyruvate synthesis, lactate dehydrogenase produces lactate from pyruvate and generates NAD+ (required for further glycolysis). PDH-kinase inhibits pyruvate dehydrogenase, thereby diverting pyruvate away from the Krebs cycle, and towards lactate. With the clearance of microbes and ablation of edema, specialized proresolution mediators (SPM), Th2-type cytokines, and the uptake of apoptotic neutrophils (early efferocytosis) produce a phenotype switch to the M2 macrophage. IL-4 and IL-13 activate STAT6 transcriptive activity, inducing not only M2 signatures (e.g., nonopsonic endocytic receptors) but also two PPAR isoforms and 12/15-LO. The latter synthesizes SPMs—which promote further nonphlogistic recruitment and efferocytosis by macrophages—and intermediate metabolites (15-HETE and 17S-HDHA) that are necessary for PPAR activation. Lipids from engulfed neutrophils also provide PPARδ ligands. The PPARs in turn orchestrate mitochondrial biogenesis and the metabolic shift to aerobic metabolism of glucose and particularly fatty acids. PPARδ also reinforces efferocytosis by inducing receptors for apoptotic cells. Upregulated metabolic proteins/enzymes include fatty acid translocator CD36, enzymes that catalyze β-oxidation of fatty acids (e.g., LCAD-Long Chain Acyl CoA Dehydrogenase), Krebs cycle enzymes (e.g., citrate synthase), pyruvate dehydrogenase, which enables glycolysis-derived pyruvate to enter the Krebs cycle, and constituents of the Electron Transport Chain that perform oxidative phosphorylation. Inhibition of these metabolic pathways hampers M2 function [1]. Handling of fatty acids by adipose tissue M2 constitutes a unique metabolic function in that cells up-take, catabolize or esterify (not shown) fatty acids released by adipocytes, thereby constraining the level of these potentially harmful molecules within a normal range. On-going efferocytosis “satiates” the macrophage that ceases cell engulfment and promotes the resolution of inflammation, that is, phenotype switching to Mres (CD11blow). The metabolic mode and signaling cascades that regulate immune and metabolic functions of Mres remain to be elucidated.